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Around 60 killed as drug gangs clash in Brazil prison massacre

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BRASILIA (Reuters) Around 60 people were killed in a prison riot in the Amazon jungle city of Manaus, with decapitate­d bodies of drug gang members thrown over prison walls, officials said yesterday.

It was the bloodiest violence in more than two decades in Brazil’s overcrowde­d penitentia­ry system.

The security chief for Amazonas state, Sergio Fontes, told a news conference the death toll could rise as authoritie­s get a clearer idea of the scale of the rebellion sparked by a fight between rival drug gangs.

Fontes told reporters several decapitate­d bodies were thrown over the prison wall, and most of those killed came from one gang.

“This was another chapter in the silent and ruthless war of drug traffickin­g,” he said.

Pedro Florencio, the Amazonas state prison secretary, said the massacre was a “revenge killing” in a feud between criminal gangs in Brazil.

The riot began late Sunday and was brought under control by around 7 am AMT (1100 GMT) yesterday, Fontes said. Authoritie­s were still counting prisoners to determine how many had escaped, he added, with reports that up to 300 fled.

Just as the riot began in one unit of the Anisio Jobim prison complex, dozens of prisoners in the second unit started a mass escape in what authoritie­s said was a coordinate­d effort to distract guards.

Overcrowdi­ng is extremely common in Brazil’s prisons, which suffer endemic violence and what rights groups call medieval conditions with food scarce and cells so packed that prisoners have no space to lie down.

The Anisio Jobim prison complex currently houses 2,230 inmates despite having a capacity of only 590.

Hours after the Anisio Jobim prison revolt ended, prisoners at in an adjoining detention center began a riot and attempted to escape. Authoritie­s said the situation was quickly brought under control.

Watchdog groups sharply criticize Brazil for its prisons where deadly riots routinely break out.

“These massacres occur almost daily in Brazil,” said Father Valdir Silveira, director of Pastoral Carceraria, a Catholic center that monitors prison conditions in Brazil. “Our prisons were built to annihilate, torture and kill.”

The violence was the latest clash between inmates aligned with the Sao Paulo-based First Capital Command (PCC) drug gang, Brazil’s most powerful, and a local Manaus criminal group known as the North Family.

The Manaus-based gang is widely believed to be attacking PCC inmates at the behest of the Rio de Janeiro-based Red Command (CV) drug gang, Brazil’s second largest.

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